Truth or Dare Wheel
The oldest party game in the world has one weak point: the "you always pick truth!" argument. The wheel fixes it. Each player spins on their turn — the wheel decides truth or dare, chance takes the blame, and the game keeps moving. Four Truth and four Dare segments guarantee a fair 50/50 on every spin.
How to play
- Sit in a circle (or on a video call — it works great remotely).
- On your turn, spin the wheel. No re-spins — that's the rule that makes it fun.
- Truth: answer honestly. Dare: do the thing. The group decides if you delivered.
- Chickening out costs a forfeit — the group picks it (keep it kind).
Starter questions and dares
Truths: What's the most embarrassing song you secretly love? What's a lie you told that you still feel bad about? Who in this room would you trade lives with for a day? What's your most irrational fear? What's the worst gift you ever gave someone?
Dares: Talk in an accent until your next turn. Let the group post a (harmless) status from your phone. Do your best impression of another player. Eat a spoonful of a condiment chosen by the group. Show everyone your most-used emoji list.
Playing with kids or coworkers? Keep a "family mode" rule: all truths and dares must pass the grandma test. Need turn order too? Put everyone's name on the main wheel and spin for who goes next.
Make it yours
Want to add, remove or reword the options? Hit “Customize this wheel” under the spinner — it opens this exact list in the full wheel editor, where you can edit entries, change the theme, and share your version with a link. You can also toggle Remove winner after spin to run through every option without repeats.
FAQ
Is the wheel really 50/50 between truth and dare?
Yes — the wheel has four Truth and four Dare segments, and every spin lands uniformly at random, so both outcomes always have equal odds.
Can I make a wheel with actual questions on it?
Yes — click “Customize this wheel” and replace the segments with your own truths and dares, then share the link with your group.
Can we play remotely?
Absolutely. Share your screen on the call, or send the wheel link so everyone spins the same wheel on their turn.